Rod Clements

Rod Clements

Rod Clements on stage with Lindisfarne in 1991
Background information
Birth name Roderick Parry Clements
Born November 17, 1947(1947-11-17)
North Shields, Tyne and Wear, England
Genres Roots, blues, Americana, folk, rock
Instruments Electric slide guitar, dobro, acoustic guitar
Associated acts Brethren, Downtown Faction, Jack The Lad, Lindisfarne, Pacamax, Pentangle, Rod Clements & The Ghosts of Electricity

Rod Clements (born Roderick Parry Clements, 17 November 1947, North Shields, Tyne and Wear) is a British guitarist and singer-songwriter.

Contents

Career

Clements was an only child, and grew up in a household in which neither parent was especially active musically, though his mother did play the piano. His father was a lover of classical music and he encouraged his son to attend concerts. Clements attended The King's School, Tynemouth after which, at the age of 12, he was sent to Durham School.[1] From an early age he had been able to pick up a tune and play it and his first inspiration to play the guitar came from hearing the hits of Duane Eddy, The Shadows and The Ventures.[2] By 1965 he had formed an R&B group called Downtown Faction.[3]

Clements teamed up with local musicians in North Shields to form a blues band (also called the Downtown Faction). The band was later renamed Brethren, and became regular performers at folk clubs in the North East.[3] Clements befriended a Newcastle singer/songwriter called Alan Hull, and formed the folk-rock band Lindisfarne with him and several members of Brethren in 1970. Although Hull was Lindisfarne's main songwriter, Clements provided the band with its first hit in "Meet Me On The Corner", a UK Top 5 hit in March 1972. Clements won a Certificate of Honour at the Ivor Novello Awards for the song.[4]

Lindisfarne broke up in 1973 and Clements became a founding member of Jack the Lad, which also included two other former Lindisfarne members, on whose debut album It's Jack The Lad he played a significant role as multi-instrumentalist and songwriter.[3] In 1974 he played bass on Ralph McTell's Streets of London, which topped the UK charts at Christmas that year. Clements went on to tour and record several albums with McTell. He also worked with Bert Jansch, touring Britain and Europe and working as Producer on Bert's comeback album A Rare Conundrum. Clements and Jansch also recorded a Woody Guthrie tribute album, Woody Lives!, and the jointly credited Leather Launderette.[1]

Lindisfarne reformed in 1977 and Clements continued to be part of the line-up, contributing many songs to albums such as Back and Fourth and Dance Your Life Away. Following Alan Hull's death in 1995 Rod became the band's main songwriter who, in partnership with producer and co-writer Nigel Stonier, provided the bulk of material for Lindisfarne's two last albums, Here Comes The Neighbourhood (1998) and Promenade (2002). The band finally broke up following a concert in Newcastle Opera House in November 2003.[5]

Clements has also toured and recorded with Rab Noakes and Michael Chapman and perrformed on albums by Peter Hammill, Wizz Jones and Kathryn Tickell amongst others. He has also supplied bass, dobro, and guitar parts to albums by singer/songwriter Thea Gilmore, who has herself appeared on Rod's solo albums.[1]

Clements released the album One Track Mind in 1994, and followed this with Stamping Ground in 2000, having written or co-written each of the tracks. Another album, Odd Man Out was released in 2006. It was produced by Nigel Stonier. Spring 2008 saw the reissue with bonus tracks of One Track Mind. He continues to tour regularly, performing a mixture of Lindisfarne songs and his solo efforts.[4]

Songs written by Clements have been covered by artists including Melanie Safka and Joe Brown; and a Clements/Stonier composition, "Can't Do Right For Doing Wrong", was hit for Erin Rocha at Christmas 2003.[1]

Discography

Solo albums

Lindisfarne albums with Clements

with Jack the Lad

with Bert Jansch

Bert Jansch & Rod Clements

with Ralph McTell

with Prelude

with Dando Shaft

with Michael Chapman

with Jim Rafferty

with Rab Noakes

with Thea Gilmore

with Nigel Stonier

with Peter Hammill

with Wizz Jones

with Kathryn Tickell

with Pentangle

with Mark Knopfler

Various artists

References

External links